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Lazerlike42
Guest
I never said I had heard it exclusively on these forums. The fact is that I have heard it from those who did attend the Mass prior to the renewal of the Missal. It is a truth. You can either choose to accept it, or accuse me of lying. I would prefer the former.There are probably only a handful on these forums that grew up with the Latin Mass. I am one of those. To say that praying the rosary during Mass was an abuse is nonsense. Did it sometimes occur? Of course. But it was not the norm and it certainly was not an abuse.
In any case, it is certainly an abuse to pray the Rosary during Mass. The Holy Mass is not a time for private prayer. It is itself the highest form of prayer a human being can engage in. To use one’s mind for any other prayer while the Holy Sacrifice is taking place in your very presence is appalling and shows an utter lack of comprehension of just what it is actually going on in the sanctuary.
No, saying the Rosary during Mass does not irise to the level of participating in the demonic, but it is certainly of demonic inspiration just like any other sin. One must never disregard the Holy Mass for anything else, whether that be a personal thought or a lesser form of prayer.How many Traditional Masses have you gone to? If the EF lends itself to this “sort of thing” then there should be massive praying of the rosary at today’s Traditional Mass. That is not happening .You act as if saying the rosary during Mass is demonic.
The reason that there is not a massive amount of praying the Rosary during today’s Tridentine Masses is twofold. Firstly, those who attended indult Masses and who now attend the Extraordinary Form thanks to Benedict XVI are those who are most devoted. They cared enough about the Lord to desire the Extraordinary Form and to seek out indult Masses and now to seek out and go to celebrations of the Extraordinary Form, rather than just accepting a Mass they considered inferior or less desirable. The people that are attending today’s Extraordinary Form are the ones who would have been paying attention rather than praying the Rosary back in the 50s and 60s.
The other reason is because there was a general spiritual laziness that had taken hold of the Church prior to the Second Vatican Council. Catholics took their faith for granted and did not exercise it as they ought. I am certain you will disagree, but I cite as my authority not only Church historians, but priests of the SSPX.
SSPX priests have said that the Tridentine Mass was taken away from the people because they had come to take it for granted and to treat it with less than the reverance it deserved and required, by doing things such as praying the Rosary during Mass. Now one can certainly disagree with their conclusions - it may indeed be argued that God did not in fact “take away” the Tridentine Mass as a punishment. However, their *observations *of what was going on in the Church during the pre-Conciliar era cannot be discounted.
There is no harm to traditional Catholicism in admitting the malaise in which the Church’s spiritual life was in at that time. The Tridentine Missal and other aspects of traditional Catholicism are not tied to that negative. They are good, and merely suffered due to the spiritual bereftness that had fallen upon the Church at the time. The Church was in many ways in a better position in those days. Certainly its temporal and social presence was ***far ***greater. However, in many ways it had lost its spiritual heart. This is the very reason that John XXIII sought to call a Council in the first place, after all - to let some light into the Church, to clear the dust out, as he had put it. The vast majority of the traditionalist Catholics I know of agree with Blessed John’s intention, and consider the Council to have gotten off track from his original plan.
Again, I am not speaking of my own authority. Even the SSPX priests readily acknowledge and teach this. If they are willing to, I see no reason you shouldn’t be able to.
I do not believe the Holy Spirit remains silent for any period of time. What I said is that I believe the Holy Spirit inspired the renewal of the Liturgy as an antidote to our current microwave culture - a culture which did not exist until the late 1950s. There was no reason for the Holy Spirit to have inspired the changes I am referring to until our time. Our time is the first time in the history of the world that is so full of noise, distractions, and is such a microwave culture - we are used to getting everything in a matter of seconds.So for almost 1400 years the Holy Spirit remained silent? The Mass could have been said in the vernacular at anytime had that been the will of the Holy Spirit. And to suggest that people are paying more attention at Mass now and not when I was growing up is not true. The statistics show that in 1958 mass attendance was at 74%. In 2004 it was at 31%. Care to explain that?
I believe that the spiritual malaise in the Church in the 1940s and 50s was a result of the beginnings of this modern culture, a culture which has stolen the minds and hearts of men. My firm belief is that the Holy Spirit inspired the Council and the new Liturgy to help cut across this mess we have gotten ourselves into. It is in my opinion an extension of the Incarnation, that just as Jesus came down to become man for us to reach past our own sins, so too did He deign to speak to us in a renwed Liturgy to cut through the sins keeping us from hearing Him.
I agree with the many who argue that if not for the Council, things would be far, far, far, far worse than they are today. You cite the decline in Mass attendance, but the problem is you cannot show any causality. You are committing the logical fallacy of post hoc ergo propter hoc, which contends that just because one thing comes after the other, that it was caused by the other. In order to show this, one must show causality. In the case of Mass attendance, there are several other factors which very easily can be held accountable and which coincided almost precisely with the promulgation of the Pauline Missal, most notably Humanae Vitae, which I am sure you are aware brought forth a wave of dissent the likes of which had never been seen in the Church.
The promulgation of Humanae Vitae is considerd by everyone I am aware of who has studied modern Church history to be the singular identifying event of modern ecclesial history. This coupled with the rebellious, sex and drug driven period of the late 1960s and early 1970s would have spelled a terrible decline in Mass attendance regardless of what Missal was in use. It is impossible to say whether the Pauline Missal had a significant, if any, effect. You are certainly free to believe that it did, but there is unfortunately no way of accurately assesing whether or not it is in fact the case.
Peace and God bless!